Results/Conclusions Species local abundance is strongly correlated with regional frequency. Forest composition shifts locally along topo-moisture gradients and regionally along gradients from moist coastal sites to drier interior sites. Most dominant tree species sprout vigorously after burning and there is only weak relationship between forest composition and time since burning. Lithocarpus densiflorum is the most frequent tree species in our sample and also the most impacted by P. ramorum. L. densiflorum mortality is higher on northeast facing slopes. Contrary to expectations, mortality is not significantly associated with basal of Umbellularia californica, an important host for the disease, probably because the disease has not yet spread across the entire study region.